Macroeconomics Chapter 12
Immediate-short-run aggregate supply curve
Assumes that both input prices and output prices are fixed resulting in a horizontal line at the current price level
RIght shits of aggregate demand
Increases of aggregate demand to the right of the fill-employment output cause Inflation and positive GDP gaps where actual GDP exceeds potential GDP
Right Shift of Aggregate supply Curve
Large improvements in productivity
Aggregate demand and supply curves depend on
Real GDP and Price Level
Left shifts of aggregate demand curve
Shifts of the aggregate demand curve to the left of the full-employment cause recession, negative gdp gaps and cyclical unemployment
Changes in aggregate demand factors
alter the spending by these groups and shift the aggregate demand curve. The extent of the shift is determined by the size of the initial change in spending and the economy's multiplier
The foreign purchases effect suggests that
an increase in one country's price level relative to the price levels in other countries reduced the net export component of that nation's aggregate demand
Long-run aggregate supply curve
assumes that nominal wages and other input prices fully match any change in the price level. The curve is vertical at full-employment output
Determinants of aggregate supply
input prices, productivity, and the legal-institutional environment. A change in these factors changes the input price level and therefore will shift the aggregate supply curve
Intersection of demand and supply curves
is equilibrium price level and real GDP
Short-run aggregate supply curve assumes
nominal wages and other input prices remain fixed while output prices vary. THe curve is generally up-sloping because per-unit production costs and prices rise
Left Shifts of Aggregate supply
reflect increases in per-unit production costs and cause cost-push inflation with accompanying negative GDP gaps
Aggregate Supply Curve shows
shows the levels of real output that businesses will produce at various price levels
Determinants of aggregate demand:
spending by domestic consumers, by businesses, by government and by foreign buyers
The real-balances effect indicates
that inflation reduces the real value or purchasing power of fixed value financial assets causing cut-backs in consumer spending
Aggregate demand curve shows
the level of real output that the economy demands at each price level
Aggregate demand curve is downsloping because
the real-balances effect, the interest-rate effect, and the foreign purchases effect
interest-rate effect means that
with a specific supply of money, a higher price level increases the demand for money, thereby raising the interest rate and reducing investment purchases